Mountain Path
Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
Hi all,
Just finished a phone call with my doctors (who are generally excellent by the way) and the upshot is they can not support my non/low medication way of controlling diabetes due to NICE guidelines.
I was amazed and was wondering if anyone else had hit this barrier.
My non/low medication way is to:-
1. Use a continuous glucose monitor started with Libra freestyle now using a Dexom1
2. Do not eat anything with free sugar in it at all.
3. Generally do not eat anything with/significantly reduce Carbohydrates (virtually none at all)
4. In the event of high sugar then exercise vigorously till it comes down. (generally 20 -30 minutes on a exercise bike works)
5. Only use the prescribed medicine Metformin and Glucizide in emergencies when I am unable to exercise or accidently eat something I cant exercise off (takeaways and restaurants are a killer).
This means I don't take the pills regularly and if I don't 'fall off the wagon' don't take them at all.
This came about when it appeared my medication stopped working and I was unable to access medical advice fast enough (during the worst of the post pandemic doctor availability issues). I had previously (5 years ago) using a VLCD significantly reduced my diabetic markers to the point that I moved to pre-diabetic levels so I knew it would probably work. But it was very hard to maintain this diet at the time (VLCD = 800 calories per day) and slipped back to normal food and medication to negate it.
When I had my delayed annual review it showed a pretty good Hb1a that indicated that I could probably stop medication or just go down to a minimum metformin dose. I discussed my new methodology which was applauded and then unknown to me they stopped my repeat prescription of all medication.
On the call they have said that my method of managing diabetes (take pills as needed only) is not covered by NICE guidelines so they can only prescribe if I undertake to take pills regularly. (The pharmacist was sympathetic spent a lot of time discussing the situation but the end conclusion was the same).
So it seems to me I have three options:-
1. Abandon the new method go back to eating donuts (I miss these the most) and take increasingly powerful medicine to mitigate it.
2. Make sure I never fall off the wagon and thus never need emergency sugar mitigation (really hard especially with the dawn effect, natural surge in blood sugar first thing in the morning regardless of what you eat).
3. Lie to my doctors get the pills on the basis that I am following standard treatment and carry on regardless.
Note that it may be that taking 1 metformin a day or some other low dose will reduce/prevent sudden surges but I suspect it will not.
I understand before drugs were available the only way to treat diabetes was with diet and exercise and cant help thinking that the current approach is to prescribe drugs to facilitate an unhealthy lifestyle.
Although looking at the unnecessary quantities of sugar in nearly all foods and the massive amounts of carbohydrates in our diet, what would be considered a average diet is in effect an unhealthy diet, particularly if you eat ANY takeaways, ready meals or processed foods, most restaurants are also problematic unless you go protein, vegetables and salads only and no sauces (oh an I used to be a gourmet! quietly weeps).
This is a perfect storm and any attempt to escape it seems to be made unnecessarily difficult by the current polices of NICE.
I conclude with an (approximate) quote from my pharmacists 'Maybe your way is the future way we will manage diabetes but it is not supported at present'
I would be interested, obviously with peoples thoughts and own experiences.
Thanks,
Mountain Path.
Just finished a phone call with my doctors (who are generally excellent by the way) and the upshot is they can not support my non/low medication way of controlling diabetes due to NICE guidelines.
I was amazed and was wondering if anyone else had hit this barrier.
My non/low medication way is to:-
1. Use a continuous glucose monitor started with Libra freestyle now using a Dexom1
2. Do not eat anything with free sugar in it at all.
3. Generally do not eat anything with/significantly reduce Carbohydrates (virtually none at all)
4. In the event of high sugar then exercise vigorously till it comes down. (generally 20 -30 minutes on a exercise bike works)
5. Only use the prescribed medicine Metformin and Glucizide in emergencies when I am unable to exercise or accidently eat something I cant exercise off (takeaways and restaurants are a killer).
This means I don't take the pills regularly and if I don't 'fall off the wagon' don't take them at all.
This came about when it appeared my medication stopped working and I was unable to access medical advice fast enough (during the worst of the post pandemic doctor availability issues). I had previously (5 years ago) using a VLCD significantly reduced my diabetic markers to the point that I moved to pre-diabetic levels so I knew it would probably work. But it was very hard to maintain this diet at the time (VLCD = 800 calories per day) and slipped back to normal food and medication to negate it.
When I had my delayed annual review it showed a pretty good Hb1a that indicated that I could probably stop medication or just go down to a minimum metformin dose. I discussed my new methodology which was applauded and then unknown to me they stopped my repeat prescription of all medication.
On the call they have said that my method of managing diabetes (take pills as needed only) is not covered by NICE guidelines so they can only prescribe if I undertake to take pills regularly. (The pharmacist was sympathetic spent a lot of time discussing the situation but the end conclusion was the same).
So it seems to me I have three options:-
1. Abandon the new method go back to eating donuts (I miss these the most) and take increasingly powerful medicine to mitigate it.
2. Make sure I never fall off the wagon and thus never need emergency sugar mitigation (really hard especially with the dawn effect, natural surge in blood sugar first thing in the morning regardless of what you eat).
3. Lie to my doctors get the pills on the basis that I am following standard treatment and carry on regardless.
Note that it may be that taking 1 metformin a day or some other low dose will reduce/prevent sudden surges but I suspect it will not.
I understand before drugs were available the only way to treat diabetes was with diet and exercise and cant help thinking that the current approach is to prescribe drugs to facilitate an unhealthy lifestyle.
Although looking at the unnecessary quantities of sugar in nearly all foods and the massive amounts of carbohydrates in our diet, what would be considered a average diet is in effect an unhealthy diet, particularly if you eat ANY takeaways, ready meals or processed foods, most restaurants are also problematic unless you go protein, vegetables and salads only and no sauces (oh an I used to be a gourmet! quietly weeps).
This is a perfect storm and any attempt to escape it seems to be made unnecessarily difficult by the current polices of NICE.
I conclude with an (approximate) quote from my pharmacists 'Maybe your way is the future way we will manage diabetes but it is not supported at present'
I would be interested, obviously with peoples thoughts and own experiences.
Thanks,
Mountain Path.